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・ Hakan Söyler
・ Hakan Sürsal
・ Hakan Tastan and Turan Topal
・ Hakan Topal
・ Hakan Turan
・ Hakan Utangaç
・ Hakan Yakin
・ Hakan Yavuz
・ Hakan Yılmaz
・ Hakan Yılmaz (political scientist)
・ Hakan Yılmaz (weightlifter)
・ Hakan Çalhanoğlu
・ Hakan Özmert
・ Hakan Özoğuz
・ Hakan Ünsal
Hakan Şükür
・ Hakan, Iran
・ Hakanaku mo Towa no Kanashi
・ Hakanen
・ Hakaniemi
・ Hakaniemi metro station
・ Hakanlar Çarpışıyor
・ Hakanpää
・ Hakaona language
・ Hakapik
・ Hakaraia Pahewa
・ Hakari (river)
・ Hakariishi Station
・ Hakarimata Range
・ Hakaru


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Hakan Şükür : ウィキペディア英語版
Hakan Şükür

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Hakan Şükür (born 1 September 1971) known by his nick name Kral –literally meaning ''The King''–, or Bull of Bosphorus〔 is a Turkish retired footballer who played as a striker. He spent the majority of his professional career with Galatasaray, being a three-time ''Gol Kralı'' (Goal King, title and award given to the annual top goalscorer of the Süper Lig), representing the club in three different spells and winning a total of 14 major titles.
He is the 2nd most capped player of Turkey, represented his country in total of 112 times, scoring 51 goals, making him the nation's top goalscorer and 19th in the world. One of the most prolific strikers of the modern era, he netted 383 goals throughout his club career as well as the fastest ever in a World Cup, in 2002. He retired from football in 2008, only scoring once in single digits for his main team in 13 seasons; he is renowned for his heading ability.
In the 2011 general elections, he was elected as an Istanbul MP for the Justice and Development Party. He resigned from the party in December 2013, continuing to serve as an independent.
==Club career==
Born in Adapazarı, Sakarya Province, Şükür began his football career with local club Sakaryaspor, making his professional debut shortly after his 17th birthday. His first goal came in a match against Eskişehirspor on 26 February 1989: with the match tied 2–2, he entered the pitch as a substitute and scored the winning goal; he went on to score a further 19 Süper Lig goals in his three-year spell with the club.
In the summer of 1990, Şükür joined fellow first division side Bursaspor. He scored six goals in 27 games in his second season, helping the team to a sixth-place finish, and making his Turkish national team debut shortly after.
Subsequently, Şükür signed for national giants Galatasaray SK.〔 Nicknamed the ''Bull of the Bosphorus'',〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Hakan Sukur Biography )〕 he scored 19 goals in 30 matches in his first year with the club, helping it lift both the league and cup titles, adding 16 and 19, respectively, in the next two seasons, and attracting the attention of Torino FC. In 1995 he moved to the Italian club, becoming the second Turkish player to ever play in the Serie A, but returned to his country and Galatasaray in the following winter transfer window, failing to settle and only netting once in the league.
Upon his return to Galatasaray, Şükür regained his scoring form, scoring 16 goals in the league and helping the club win the cup. The following season, he collected 38 goals in the league, tying him for second-most goals scored in a season with Metin Oktay, one goal behind record holder Tanju Çolak; both players were playing for Galatasaray when they broke the record.〔 Şükür also finished third in the ESM Golden Boot rankings with 57 points, behind Mário Jardel (60) and Ronaldo (68).〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Golden Boot ("Soulier d'Or") Awards )〕 He won the ''Gol Kralı'' award the following two seasons, netting 33 and 18 goals respectively, with the Istanbul side winning the title in all three seasons.〔
In the 1999–2000 season, Şükür's last with Galatasaray in his second stint, the team completed a domestic double for the second year in succession, and added the year's UEFA Cup, becoming the first Turkish side to win a European title; in the 4–1 penalty shootout win against Arsenal he scored on his attempt, having netted 10 times in 17 games during the campaign.

Şükür then moved to Italy once again, this time to Inter Milan, scoring six goals in 35 official games. His appearances were limited by the presence of Ronaldo and Christian Vieri in the team's attack〔 and January 2002, after one-and-a-half seasons, he signed with another team in the country, Parma FC, but was unable to produce again, only finding the net three times. Having been released, on 9 December he joined Blackburn Rovers in the Premier League for the remainder of the campaign, signed by former Galatasaray manager Graeme Souness. His spell began with him sustaining a broken leg in training which ruled him out for two months, after which made his debut for the club on 1 March 2003, replacing the injured Egil Østenstad at half time in a 1–0 home win over Manchester City; he scored twice from nine appearances, both goals coming in a 4–0 defeat of Fulham at Craven Cottage on 7 April.
Şükür returned to Galatasaray on 7 July 2003, after failing to negotiate a new contract with Blackburn.〔 He scored 12 times in 28 league games in his first season, and 18 in the following, with the team winning the 2005 Turkish cup during that timeframe. Also, on 3 December 2003, he found the net twice in a 2–0 home defeat of Juventus F.C. for the 2003–04 UEFA Champions League. In November 2003, to celebrate UEFA's Jubilee, he was selected as Turkey's Golden Player by the Turkish Football Federation, as their most outstanding player of the past 50 years.
In the 2005–06 season, Şükür again scored in double digits (ten) as Galatasaray again won the league. After helping the club win a record-tying seventeenth first division title in 2007–08, netting 11 goals, he decided to retire from the game, aged nearly 37. Subsequently, he often appeared as a television pundit on TRT. During his career, he scored 38 goals in all European competitions.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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